You Don't Love Me Yet is a well-deserved palate cleanser for novelist Jonathan Lethem after his two brilliant Brooklyn chronicles, The Fortress of Solitude and Motherless Brooklyn, which won him a MacArthur genius grant.

One of the world's favorite cult writers, Philip K. Dick, is being canonized. The Library of America, which releases hardcover editions of Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne and other literary masters, will publish four of Dick's futuristic novels next summer, including Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? the basis for the classic film, Blade Runner.

Dean Cain romanced Teri Hatcher from 1993-97 on ABC's Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. At last week's world premiere of Superman Returns (now in theaters), Cain who turns 40 in July reminisced with USA TODAY about his own years in the red cape and blue tights.

Jonathan Lethem has the potential to be one of the most unique and imaginative writers of his generation. His latest is Men and Cartoons, a collection of previously published short fiction. The stories read like a literary demo tape, more a collection of ideas, experiments and exercises than stories. And like a demo tape, the stories will be treasured by Lethem fans just because he wrote them, though more casual readers might feel dissatisfied.